Amar DāsDas ( born 1479 , Khadur?, India—died 1574 , Goindwal ) third Sikh GurūGuru (1522–74), appointed at the advanced age of 73, noted for his division of the Punjab into 22 Sikh dioceses and his dispatch of missionaries administrative districts and for encouraging missionary work to spread the faith. Realizing that periodical meetings of all Sikhs would strengthen the faith, he ordered three great festivals a year. He was much revered for his wisdom and piety, and it was said that even the Mughal emperor Akbar sought his advice and ate in the Sikhs’ casteless laṅgarlangar(free “kitchen”communal refectory).

Under Amar

Dās’s

Das’s direction, the city of Goindwal became a

Sikh

centre of

learning.

Gurū Amar Dās Sikh authority and learning. He strengthened the existing institutions of Sikh scripture, liturgy, and langar, making it a rule that anyone who wished to see him had to eat in the refectory first. He also introduced a religio-administrative structure of 22 manjis (literally “cots,” in function “seats”), which created the possibility of effective governance for the entire increasingly large Sikh community. Appointees to these seats were to provide doctrinal guidance for their constituents, encourage the entry of others into the Sikh community, and serve as links between the local congregations and Goindwal. To further enhance the cohesion between distant congregations and Goindwal, Guru Amar Das instituted pilgrimages that were tied to a newly formed Sikh calendar. By incorporating two preexisting festivals, Vaisakhi (at the time of the spring harvest) and Diwali (at the fall harvest), into the calendar and changing their orientation, he established two major occasions when all Sikhs were encouraged to go to Goindwal and participate in communal celebrations.

Guru Amar Das advocated a middle way of life between the extremes of asceticism and sensuous pleasure, and he praised the life of the ordinary family man. Thus, a man could enjoy prosperity and please God also. Among his social reforms, he further extended the laṅgar and made it a rule that anyone wanting to see him must first eat in the kitchen. He purified the Sikh religion of Hindu practices, encouraged intercaste marriage, and allowed widows to remarry. He also strictly enjoined his followers to refrain from the prevailing Hindu practice of suttee (self-immolation of a widow on her husband’s funeral pyre).